Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KHANDIGE SHAM BHAT AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE AGRICULTURAL INCOME TAX OFFICER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/08/1962
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 591 1963 SCR (3) 809
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC 630 (28)
R 1964 SC 370 (10,11)
F 1967 SC1458 (23)
RF 1967 SC1895 (23)
RF 1969 SC 378 (3,4)
RF 1970 SC1133 (18,32)
R 1972 SC 828 (20,34)
R 1972 SC 845 (14,15)
R 1973 SC1034 (18A)
R 1974 SC 497 (21)
R 1974 SC 849 (9)
R 1975 SC1234 (25)
F 1980 SC 271 (34)
R 1980 SC 959 (4)
R 1980 SC 959 (4)
R 1980 SC1382 (75)
R 1983 SC 634 (21)
R 1988 SC2062 (14)
ACT:
Agricultural Income tax - Temporary amendment of enactment
consequent on reorqanisation of States-Territorial
classification in defining previous year. If
discriminatory--Mode of ascertaining rate - If reasonable-
Kerala Agricultural Act, 1950 (Kerala 22 of 1950), as
amended by Kerala Act 11 of 1959, s.2A Constitution of
India, Art 14.
HEADNOTE:
This petition challenged the constitutional validity of s.
2A of the Kerala Agricultural Income Tax Act, 1950 as
amended by Kerala Act II of 1959, tinder which the peti-
tioner was assessed to agricultural income tax, on the
ground that the section infringed Art. 14 of the
Constitution. Under tile States Reoganisation Act, 1956,
Kasargod Taluk where the petitioner had his agricultural
land and which was in the State of Madras, became a part of
the Malabar District of the State of Kerala when that State
came into being on November 1, 1956. By the Travancore
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Cochin Agricultural Income Tax (Amendment) Act, 1957, the
State Legislature extended the earlier Act of 1950 to the
erstwhile Madras areas. But the Kerala High Court held that
agricultural income in such areas could not be assessed to
tax for the assessment year 1957-1958 whereas similar income
in other areas of the State remained liable to tax, the
income accrued between November 1, 1. 1956, and March 31,
1957, i.e. after the Madras areas became part of the Kerala
State, could not also be taxed. In order to remedy this
anomalous position brought about by the reorganisation of
States the Kerala State Legislature inserted the impugned
section in the original Act, which provided as follows,-
"Notwithstanding anything contained in cl. (G) of Section 2,
"previous years" for the assessment for the financial year
commencing from the 1st day of April 1958 and so far as such
assessment relates to the agricultural income derived from
lands situated in the Malabar District referred to in
subsection (2) of section 5 of the States Reorganization
Act, 1956 (Central Act 37 of 1957), shalt be the whole
period
810
commencing on the 1st day of November, 1956 and ending on
the 31st day of March, 1958, or, if the accounts of the
assessed have been made up to a date within the fincial year
ending on the 31st day of March 1958, then at the option of
the assessee, the period commencing on the 1st day of Novem-
ber, 1956, and ending on the aforesaid date to which, the
accounts have been so made up:
provided that -
(i) notwithstanding anything continued in section 3 and 56,
the agricultural income tax and super tax chargeable on the
total agricultural income of the previous year as reckoned
in this section shall be at the rates applicable to the
’average annual income’ according to the Schedule; such
average annual income’ shall be an amount bearing to the
aforesaid total agricultural income the same proportion as
the period of twelve months bears to the period of the
previous year as defined in this section; and
(ii) the limit of exemption from chargeability to tax shall
be determined with reference to the average annual income."
It was urged on behalf of the petitioners that classifica-
tion of the State into two parts i.e. Madras area and
Travancore area made by the impugned provision had no
rational relation to the object of the Act and was
discriminatory and that the basis adopted for ascertaining
the rate of tax was arbitrary and unreasonable.
Held, that the contentions must fail.
In order to judge whet her a law was discriminatory what had
primarily to be looked into was not its phraseology but its
real effect. If there was equality and uniformity within
each group, the law could not be discriminatory, though due
to fortuitous circumstances in a peculiar situation some
included in a class might get some advantage over others, so
long as they were not sought out for special treatment.
Although taxation laws could be no exception to this rule,
the courts would, in view of the inherent complexity of
fiscal adjustment of diverse elements, permit a larger
discretion to the Legislature in the matter of classifi-
cation so long as there was no transgression of the
fundamental principles underlying the doctrine of
classification. The power of the Legislature to classify
must necessarily be wide
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and flexible so as to enable it to adjust its system of
taxation in all proper and reasonable ways.
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Shri Ram Krishna Dalmia v. Shri Justice S. R. Tendolkar
[1959] S.C.R. 287 Purshottam Govindji Halai v. Shree B.M
Desai, [1955] 2 S.C.R 887 and Kunnathat Thathunni Moppil
Nair v. State of Kerala, [1961] 3 S.C.R. 77, referred to
The object of the classification made in the definition of
’previous year’ by the impugned section was not to discri-
minate against the agriculturists of the Madras area but to
remove the difference that existed between them and those of
the other areas of the State, due to historical reasons, by
im. posing the tax on the assessees in the Madras area for
the period November 1, 1956, to March 31, 1957. There could
therefore, be no doubt as to the existence of a reasonable
nexus between the classification and the object of the
legislation.
It was not correct to say a law based on geographical or
territorial classification could be constitutionally valid
only if it was a preexisting Act, and not if it was enacted
after the merger. The law might be a preexisting law or one
enacted after merger. The validity of classification did
not wholly depend on the source of law but also on the
circumstances that prevailed in the two parts merged into
one by historical events.
Shri Kishan Singh v. State of Rajasthan,[1955] 2 S. C. R
531 and Purshottam Govindji Halai v. Shri B.M. Desai, [1953]
S.C.R. 887. referred to.
Nor was it correct to say that the mode of the ascertaining
the average annual income for fixing the rate was arbitrary
and unreasonable. Although a taxation law was as much
subject to Art. 14 of the constitution as any other law, the
court would not for obvious reason meticulously scrutinize
the impact of its burden on different persons or classes and
would not strike down the law on the ground that not the one
but another method of assessment should have been adopted,
unless it was convinced that the method adopted was capri-
cious, fanciful, arbitrary or clearly unjust.
Although no Act, permanent or temporary, could violate Art.
14, the fact that the impugned legislation was to enure for
a year to tide over the situation, must have some bearing in
judging the reasonableness of the method selected and it
could not be struck down as unreasonable on the ground that
there was better alternatives.
812
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 103 of 1961.
Petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
G. S. Pathak and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the petitioners.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India and
Sardar Bahadur, for the respondents.
1962. August 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SUBBA RAO, J.-These two petitions filed under Art. 32 of the
Constitution by different parties are directed against the
Agricultural Income-tax Officer, Kasaragod, and the State of
Kerala, for a declaration that s, 2A of the Kerala
Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1950, as amended by Kerala Act
11 of 1959, (hereinafter referred to as the Act) is
constitutionally void and for quashing the orders of
assessment made by the first respondent pursuant to the said
provision-
As it is common case that the decision in the first petition
would govern the second one, it would suffice if the facts
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in the first petition were given.
Kasaragod Taluk, wherein the agricultural lands of the
petitioner’s family are situate, formed part of the district
of South Kanara in the Madras State. Under the States
Reorganization Act, 1956 (Central Act 37 of 1956) the Kerala
State comprising the following territories was formed: (a)
the territories of the existing State of Travancore-Coching
excluding the territories transferred to the State of Madras
by Section 4; and (b) the territories comprised in (i)
Malabar District, excluding the islands of Laccadive and
Minicoy, and (ii) Kasaragod Taluk of South
813
Kanara District. Under the Act the territories comprised in
Kasaragod Taluk of South Kanara District and the District of
Malabar in the Madras State were constituted into a separate
district known as the Malabar District in the State of
Kerala. For convenience of reference we shall hereinafter
describe the territories carved out of the Madras State as
Madras area and the rest as T-C area. After the formation
of the State of Kerala on November 1, 1956, the laws in
force in the State of Madras were continued in the Madras
area and those in force in the Travancore-Cochin State were
continued in the T.C. area. In the T.C. area agricultural
income was liable to tax under the Travancore-Cochin
Agricultural Income-tax Act (22 of 1950) which came into
force on April 1, 1951. After the formation of the Kerala
State, the Legislature of that State enacted the Travancore-
Cochin Agricultural Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1957.
Whereunder the earlier Act of 1950 was extended to the
Madras area with appropriate amendments. Under the said Act
agricultural income derived from lands situated throughout
the State of Kerala became assessable with effect from
assessment year 1957 58. Pursuant to the provisions of that
Act the Income-tax authorities started proceedings to assess
the income derived from lands situated in the Madras area
for the year 1957-58, On a petition filed by some of the
assessees, the Kerala High Court held that the State of
Kerala had no authority to levy tax on agricultural income
which accrued before November 1, 1956, from lands situated
in the Madras area and that the assessments for 1957-58 were
not sustainable under the Act even in respect of income
which arose after November 1, 1956, on the ground that the
previous year, as defined under the Act, was a period of
twelve months ending on March 31, preceding the year for
which assessment was to be
814
made. The result of the decision was that agricultural
income derived from lands in the Madras area was not
liable to tax for the assessment year 195768., whereas
similar income from agricultural lands situated in the T.C.
area was liable to tax, indeed, the income accrued between
November 1, 1956, and March 31, 1957, i. e., the income
accrued after the Madras area became part of the Kerala
State, also could not be taxed. To remedy the situation
brought about by historical reasons in the two geographical
parts of the Kerala State, the Government of Kerala
promulgated on January 12, 1959 the Agricultural Income-tax
(Amendment) Ordinance 11 of 1959. Subsequently the Kerala
Legislature passed the Agricultural Income-tax (Amendment)
Act 11 of 1959 replacing the earlier Ordinance, hereinafter
called the Amending Act.
Before the Amending Act was passed,, the petitioner, who has
lands in different villages in Kasaragod Taluk, submitted a
return of the income of his family for the assessment year
1957-58, and on June 30, 1958, the concerned Income-tax
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Officer determined the petitioner’s net income for the
accounting period April 1, 1956, to March 31, 1957, and the
tax payable thereon. The petitioner preferred an appeal to
the Assistant Commissioner of Agricultural Income-tax,
Kozhikode, against the order of the Income-tax Officer
questioning the said assessment on the ground, inter alia,
that the assessment was made arbitrarily. When that appeal
was pending, the judgment of the Kerala High Court was
delivered and subsequently Ordinance II of 1959 was
promulgated. The Assistant Commissioner, therefore, set
aside the order of the Income-tax Officer on the basis of
the decision of the Kerala High Court and remanded the
matter to the Agricultural Income. tax Officer for disposal
in accordance with law. After remand, on March 23, 1959,
the Income-tax
815
Officer issued a notice to the petitioner to submit his
return of agricultural income for the assessment year 1957-
58 in accordance with the provisions of the Ordinance and
the subsequent Amending Act replacing the said Ordinance.
On November 10, 1960, the Income-tax Officer determined the
net income of the petitioner for the assessment year 1958 59
at Rs. 87,745.36 and assessed the tax at Rs. 21,920.41; the
tax was calculated on the average net annual income of the
petitioner for 12 months under the proviso to s. 2A of the
Act. The petitioner seeks to set aside that assessment on
the ground that the said section offends Art-14 of the
Constitution and therefore the assessment was bad.
Mr. Pathak, Learned counsel for the petitioner, argues that
the classification of Kerala State into two parts, i.e., the
Madras area and the T-C area, has no rational relation to
the object of the Act, namely, imposition of agricultural
income-tax, for., as the two parts belong to the same State,
no post-amalgamation law can treat assessees of the same
State differently in the matter of taxation. He further
contends that there is discrimination between assessees of
Kasaragod Taluk and those of the other part of the Madras
area inasmuch as under s.2A of the Act the average annual
income would be the average annual income of 12 months out
of 17 months, with the result that the assessees of
Kasaragod Taluk whose entire income accrued after November
1, 1956, were unjustly discriminated from assessees of the
other part of the Madras area whose income accrued only
before November 1, 1956. He also contends that in any view
the basis adopted for ascertaining the rate was arbitrary
and unreasonable as 24 months’ income was taken as income
for 17 months.
816
Learned Additional Solicitor General, on the other hand,
seeks to sustain the assessment on the ground that the
classification was based on historical reasons, that on the
face of the Act all the assessees falling within the class
to which s.2A applies are treated alike, that the State is
entitled to adopt one of the many modes available for
ascertaining the rate, that whatever basis is adopted for
ascertaining the rate there is bound to be some hard cases
and that circumstance cannot conceivable affect the validity
of the law.
At the outset it would be convenient to notice briefly the
law on the doctrine of classification. The law on the
subject is well settled and it does not require restatement
in extenso. It would suffice if we noticed the principles
relevant to the enquiry. The law has been neatly and
succinctly summarized in Shri Ram Krishna Dalmia v. Shri
Justice S. R. Tendolkar (1) thus:
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"It is now well established that while article
14 forbids class legislation, it does not
forbid reasonable classification for the
purposes of legislation. In order, however,
to pass the test of permissible classification
two conditions must be fulfilled, namely, (i)
that the classification must be founded on an
intelligible differential which distinguished
persons or things that are grouped together
from others left out of the group and, (ii)
that differentia must have a rational relation
to the object sought to be achieved by the
statute in question. The classification may
be founded on different bases, namely,
geographical, or according to objects or
occupations or the like. What is necessary is
that there must be a nexus between the basis
of classification and the object of the
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 279.296-297.
817
Act under consideration. It is also well
established that article 14 condemns discri-
mination not only by a substantive law but
also by a law of procedure."
Though a law ex facie appears to. treat all that fall within
a class alike, if in effect it operates unevenly on persons
or property similarly situated, it may be said that the law
offends the equality clause. It will then be the duty of
the court to scrutinize the effect of the law carefully to
ascertain its real impact on the persons or property
similarly situated. Conversely, a law may treat persons who
appear to be similarly situated differently; but on
investigation they may be found not to be similarly
situated. To state it differently, it is not the
phraseology of a statute that governs the situation but the
effect of the law that is decisive. If there is equality
and uniformity within each group, the law will not be
condemned as discriminative, though due to some fortuitous
circumstance arising out of a peculiar situation some
included in a class get an advantage over others, so long as
they are not singled out for special treatment. Taxation
law is not an exception to this doctrine : vide Purshottam
Govindji Halai v. Shree B. N. Desai, Additional Collector of
Bombay (1) and Kunnathat Thatunni Moopil Nair v. State of
Kerala (2). But in the application of the principles, the
courts, in view of the inherent complexity of fiscal
adjustment of diverse elements, permit a larger discretion
to the Legislature in the matter of classification, so long
it adheres to the fundamental principles underlying the said
doctrine. The power of the Legislature to classify is of
"wide range and flexibility" so that it can adjust its
system of taxation in all proper and reasonable ways.
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 887. (2) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 77.
818
Now Let us look at the impugned section. Section 2A of the
Act reads :
"Notwithstanding anything contained in clause
(0) of section 2, "previous year" for the
assessment for the financial year commencing
from the 1st day of April 1958 and so far as
such assessment relates to the agricultural
income derived from lands situated in the
Malabar District referred to in sub-section
(2) of-section 5 of the States Reorganization
Act, 1956 (Central Act 37 of 1956), shall be
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the whole period commencing on the 1st day of
November, 1956 and ending on the 31st day of
March, 1958, or, if the accounts of the
assessee have been made up to a date ’within
the financial year ending on the 31st day of
March 1958, then, at the option of the
assessee, the period commencing on the 1st day
of November, 1956 and ending on the aforesaid
date to which, the accounts have been so made
up :
Provided that -
(i) notwithstanding anything contained in
sections 3 and 56, the agricultural income-tax
and super-tax chargeable on the total
agricultural income of the previous year as
reckoned in this section shall be at the rates
applicable to the "average annual income"
according to the Schedule ; such "average
annual income" shall be an amount bearing to
the aforesaid total agricultural income the
same proportion as the period of twelve months
bears to the period of the previous year as
defined in this section ; and
819
(ii) the limit of exemption from
chargeability to tax shall be determined with
reference to the "average annual income".
The Malabar District in the state of Kerala is constituted
by combining Kasaragod Taluk of the South Kanara District
and the District of Malabar of the Madras State. For the
purpose of assessment for the financial year 1958-59 in
respect of agricultural income derived from the said
district, s. 2A of the Act gives a special definition of
"previous year". Under that definition, "previous year"
commences from November 1, 1966 and ends on March 31, 1958,
i.e., a period of 17 months ; but the assessee can elect a
lesser period as "previous year" if his accounts are made up
to a date within the financial year ending on March 31,
1958, that is to say he can elect any date commencing from
April 1, 1957, to March 31, 1958, if his accounts are made
up to that date in which case the "previous year" so for as
he is concerned will commence from November 1, 1956, and end
on the said date so chosen by him. The proviso to the
section prescribes a mode of ascertaining the rate of tax in
regard to the said income : it lays down that in respect of
the said income the rates are those applicable to the
",average annual income" according to the Schedule. The
"average annual income", as defined in the proviso, will be
twelve-seventeenths of the total income of the previous year
as defined in the sections Under the section, therefore, the
assessee in the Madras area will be liable to pay
agricultural income-tax on the income accrued to him during
the 17 months commencing from November 1, 1956, and ending
on March 31, 1958, but the rate of tax payable by him is
that applicable to the "average annual income " so defined.
The question is whether this section infringes Art. 14 of
the constitution or whether it can be justified on the basis
of the
820
doctrine of classification. In the narration of facts we
have stated why it became necessary for the Legislature to
insert s.2A in Act 22 of 1950. By reason of the States
Reorganization Act, the said Madras area became part of the
Kerala State on November 1, 1956. By reason of the decision
of the Kerala High Court, agricultural income-tax could not
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be imposed in respect of income accrued to assessees in the
Madras area between April 1, 1956, and March 31, 1957, and
it was also not possible to tax them for their income even
for that part of the year after it became part of the Kerala
State: with the result, the legislature was confronted with
two geographical divisions in respect of one of which the
said law of agricultural income-tax could not be enforced while the a
ssessees in the T-C area were liable to
agricultural income-tax in regard to their income from their
lands for the year commencing from April 1, 1956, and ending
on March 31, 1957, the income of the agriculturists in the
Madras area could not be reached by that law in respect of
the whole or part of that year. These differences between
the two parts of the State which originated from historical
reasons were the basis of classification for the purpose of
taxation. The object of’ making the classification was not
to discriminate against the agriculturists of the Madras
area but to bring them into line with the agriculturists
from the rest of the Kerala State in so far as the liability
to pay agricultural income-tax was concerned. The existing
law bad therefore to be appropriately adapted for securing
this end. In these circumstances, can it be said that there
was no reasonable nexus between the classification and the
object of the legislation? The object of the legislation
thus was to impose agricultural income-tax on assessees in
the Madras area and also in respect of the period between
November 1, 1956, and March 31, 1957, which could not be
done under preexisting law. The
821
differences between the two parts of the State have
reasonable nexus to the said object. Because of the said
differences the legislature thought that the definition of
"Previous year" should be so amended in respect of the
Madras area that the assessees in that area may not escape
payment of agricultural income-tax in respect of the period
after the said area formed part of the Kerala State. It is
argued that this Court sustained the constitutional validity
of a law on geographical and territorial bases only in a
case where the said law was a preexisting law in an
erstwhile State which continued to be law in the area of
that State after it merged in the larger unit, and that it
cannot be invoked where the law is for the first time
enacted after the merger, for, it is said, in that event the
law governs the new State as an indivisible unit. Reliance
is placed upon the decision of this Court in Shri Kishan
Singh v, The State of Rajasthan(1) and Purshottam Govindji
Halai v. Shree B.M. Desai, Additional Collector of Bombay
(2). But a perusal of the Judgments does not bear out the
contention. The validity of classification does not wholly
depend upon the source of law; the law may be a preexisting
law or one that was enacted after merger. What is important
is to ascertain the existing circumstances in the two parts
merged into one by historical events in order to determine
whether the differences between the two have a reasonable
nexus to the object of the said law. For the reasons
already stated, we hold that the classification in the
present case is founded on an intelligible differentia
between the assessees of the two parts of the State, and
that the said differences have rational relationship to the
object of the Amending Act.
But it is said that the mode of ascertaining the average
annual income for the purpose of finding the
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 531.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 887.
822
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rate is arbitrary and unreasonable and that discrimination
is inherent in such a law adopting such arbitrary process.
This argument is elaborated thus: The major income of the
petitioner’s family is from arecanut, pepper and cocoanut;
the said crops are gathered between the months of November
and March; the season for harvesting arecanut in Kasaragod
Taluk is from November to March; the whole year’s pepper and
cocoanut are gathered between the months of January and
March; therefore, the income from arecanut, pepper and
cocoanut accrued to the petitioner between November 1, 1956
and March 31, 1957, is the income for the entire year; but
under the proviso to s. 2A of the Act, the said income is
treated as the income for 5 months only, with the result
that 24 months’ income is treated as 17 months’ income; this
is an arbitrary assumption underlying the provision; instead
it should have taken 12/24th of the total income as the
average annual income. This arbitrary method of fixing the
average annual income involved the payment of higher rate of
tax by the assessees in Kasaragod Taluk as compared to the
assessees in other parts of the State. It is suggested that
a more reasonable course would have been to tax the
assessees in the Madras area for the income that accrued to
them during the 5 months by treating the said income as the
income for the entire year commencing from April 1, 1956,
and ending on March 31, 1957, and that in that event not
only their income for the said period could not have escaped
taxation but it would have also avoided the unjust treatment
meted out to them in the rate of tax. Prima facie there
appears to be some plausibility in this argument; but a
closer examination discloses that though the method sugges-
ted may have been better than the method actually adopted,
the hardship in individual cases cannot in any event be
avoided. It is true taxation law cannot
823
claim immunity from the equality clause of the Constitution.
The taxation statute shall not also be arbitrary and
oppressive, but at the same time the court cannot, for
obvious reasons, meticulously scrutinize the impact of its
burden on different persons or interests. Where there is
more than one method of assessing tax and the Legislature
selects one out of them, the court will not be justified to
strike down the law on the ground that the Legislature
should have adopted another method which, in the Opinion of
the court, is more reasonable, unless it is convinced that
the method adopted is capricious, fanciful, arbitrary or
clearly unjust. From the standpoint of the test, let us
look at the impugned legislation. The taxability of the
income accrued during the 5 months is not in question. But
the attack is on the manner in which the rate is
ascertained. The statute does not fix different rates for
the two areas. The rate is the same though it varies
uniformly depending upon the different slabs of the annual
income of theprevious year. The vice of the provision,if
at all, lies in the mode of ascertaining the average annual
income of the previous year and it is true that if the said
mode is arbitrary, the same arbitrariness would attach to
the rate. But the rate must necessarily relate to the
annual income of ,he previous year. Diverse methods may be
adopted by the Legislature to ascertain the annual income
for fixing the rate, namely : (1) 12/17 of total income of
the 17 months ; (2) the 5 months’ income being treated as 12
months’ income and the annual average income ascertained as
12/24th or half of the total income accrued during the 17
months; (3) it may adopt the first 12 months’ or the last 12
months or the middle 12 months’ income as the annual income
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; and (4) treating the 5 months’ income as 12 months’ income
and separately taxing it without clubbing it with the income
of the subsequent year. Whatever
824
method is adopted, there is bound to be hardship in some
cases and advantage in others. For instance, under the
Agricultural Income-tax Act assessees getting an income
below Rs. 3,000/- are exempted from taxation. Under the
impugned section the limit for exemption from taxation shall
be determined with reference to the average annual income.
Suppose the annual income for the 12 months commencing from
April 1, 1957, and ending on March 31, 1958, is above Rs.
3,000/- ; the assessees in the T-C area would be liable to
pay income-tax, but a particular assessee in the Madras area
may have earned comparatively smaller income during the 5
months bringing down the average annual income below Rs.
3,000/- and he escapes assessment altogether. Assume again
that the assessee gets more than Rs, 3,000/- daring the 5
months ; but he may have got very low income in the
succeeding 12 months with the result that his annual average
income may fall below the range of taxable income, while the
assessee in the T-C area, who has got a similar income for
1956-57, would be liable to tax. It is also true that if
the assessee in the Madras area gets very high income during
those 5 months and little less than the taxable income
during the succeeding 12 months, his income, which would
have escaped taxation, would be liable to tax. These
illustrations prove that the section does not always work to
the disadvantage of assessees similarly situated like the
petitioner, but its effect would depend upon fortuitous
circumstances, such as the quantum of income accrued during
the 5 months and during the succeeding 12 months. That
apart under the section an option is given to the assessee
to select his accounting year commencing from November 1,
1956, and ending on a date within March 31, 1958, upto which
his accounts have been made. If an agriculturist in the
Malabar area had made up his accounts on a date which
825
does not exceed a period of 12 months from November 1, 1956,
he cannot have any complaint on the score that the rate
fixed is arbitrary. But it is said that agriculturists in
the Madras area do not keep accounts or at any rate would
not have kept accounts before the Amending Act and therefore
this argument is not realistic. But the record does not
disclose that agriculturists of Malabar area dealing in cash
crops, like arecanut, do not keep accounts or make up their
accounts on a particular date. Anyhow, the law gives an
option to agriculturists to adopt an alternative method in
case the rate fixed on the basis of average annual income
would be disadvantageous to them. The fact that they do not
keep such an account could not be an argument to support the
arbitrariness of the legislation. But these advantages or
disadvantages to individual assessees are accidental and
inevitable and are inherent in every taxing statute as it
has to draw a line somewhere and some cases necessarily fall
on the other side of the line. That apart, the tabular
statements showing the area order the principal crops and
their harvesting and marketing seasons in the Kerala State
does not establish that in Kasaragod Taluk the entire crop
of the year was harvested after November and in the rest of
Kerala before November. The following is the said state-
ment:
826
T. C. area
Crop 6 -Districts
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(in acres)
Paddy 9,07,108
Tapioca 4,89,884
Cocoanut 7,74,667
Arecanut 50,534
Cardaraon 65,879
Pepper 87,216
Tea 78,043
Coffee 5,198
Rubber 2,10,703
Lemongrass 35,000
MADRAS AREA Total area
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - for
Palghat Calicut Cannanore Kerala State
(in acres) (in acres)
4,67,5442,77,9232,46,22918,98,804
8,45540,13414,8245,53,207
45,4492,36,2951,19,01411,75,425
17,29235,23620,7711,23,833
4,2842,60099373,756
8,44931,58596,6662,23,916
1,4599,8013,68592,988
4,90926,7873,16640,060
10,10435,60014,2192,70,626
4,50050040,000
827
Crop Harvestiag Marketing
Season Season
Paddy Autumn, August September to
to October. October.
Winter: December January to
to February: February.
Summer : - March to April.
February to March.
Tapioca November to Dec. to Feb. &
June & July July to Aug.
to Aug.
Cocoanut
Arecanut 1. Travancore- June to Nov.
Cochin Nov. to March
2. S. Malabar June to November
3. N. Malabar Nov. to March
Cardamon August to October to
December January
Pepper November to December to
January February
Tea
Coffee November to September to
March April
Rubber
Lemongrass Juno to September September
828
It shows that in Cannanore, which includes Kasaragod Taluk,
only arecanut, popper, tea, coffee and rubber are harvested
after November, but in the case of paddy, tapioca coconut
and lemongrass the harvesting season is before November ;
cardamon is gathered partly before November and partly after
November. The same is the position in regard to the entire
State except in respect of arecanut ; even in respect of
arecanut, it is harvested in the Madras area other than
Cannanore before November. The net result of this analysis
is that in regard to a large extent of land cultivated in
Kerala the harvesting season is the same in respect of all
the crops except arecanut and even in the case of arecanut
out of 1,23,833 acres cultivated with that crop the
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harvesting season in regard to 20,771 acres alone commences
after November. In such a situation it cannot be said that
the Legislature has arbitrarily, with an evil eye, selected
the most advantageous period for the purpose of fixing the
rate of taxation. The said discussion leads to the only
conclusion that the Legislature in its sincere attempt to
meet a difficult situation made a law adopting one of the
diverse methods open to it and even the method adopted
cannot be said to be either unreasonable or arbitrary, as
the overall picture indicates that it works fairly well on
all similarly situated, though some hardship may be caused
to some in the implementation of the law which is almost
inevitable in every taxation law. We cannot, therefore, say
that in the present case the one method adopted instead of
another is either arbitrary or capricious.
The next argument is that there is discrimination between
assessees in Kasaragod area and those in the rest of the
Madras area in that in the case of arecanut the assessees of
Madras area, other than Kasaragod Taluk, would be in a
better position as they gather their crops before November.
The
829
assessees of the Madras area under the Act formed one class
and s. 2A applies to all of them : s. 2A applies to both
parts of the Madras Area, i. e., the Malabar area and the
South Kanara area. In both the cases the income of the
assessees that accrued before November 1, 1956 was not
taxable; in both the cases the income that accrued
thereafter is liable to tax. The rate also is the same.
The statement only shows that all the crops, except
arecanut, are gathered by the assessees of the entire area
during the same period. The fact that in the case of one of
the crops the assessees in the Malabar area harvested
earlier cannot be a ground for holding that the law has made
an unjust discrimination between persons belonging to the
same class, but that is due only to the fortuitous
circumstance of some assessees gathering the crops earlier
than others. As we have pointed out, the arecanut crop is
only one of the many crops in that area and the extent of
its cultivation in Kasaragod Taluk is comparatively lesser
than that in the entire area of the State or even the Madras
area. We cannot, therefore, say that the law made an unjust
discrimination between persons belonging to the same class.
There is another aspect which may have a bearing on the
question raised. The impugned section is a temporary
provision intended to apply only for one year to tide over a
difficult situation brought about by the reorganization of
States. It is true that every law, whether it is temporary
or permanent, cannot infringe Art. 14 of the Constitution;
but in considering the question of reasonableness of the
legislation this circumstance will have some bearing,
particularly when the legislature Selected one of the many
methods open to it. Though the method selected may not be
as good as others, we cannot hold that it is unreasonable
and, therefore, liable to be struck down.
830
In the result the petition is dismissed with costs.
It is common case that this decision will govern the other
petition also, namely, Writ Petition No. 104 of 1961. The
said petition also is dismissed with costs. There will be
one set of hearing fee. This order is without prejudice to
the order for costs made on 16-3-1962.
Petitions dismissed.
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